Quote from AAAintheBeltway:
I haven't seen anyone belittling McCain's Navy career, but just as with another vietnam vet, John Kerry, I don't see it as reason to make him president. He's already parlayed it into 25 years in the Senate, with little to show for it other than a lot of appearances on the sunday morning shows.
I don't think you fully understand the opposition to him among conservatives. It's not that he isn't quite conservative enough. You might make that criticism of Romney or Huckabee, for example. With McCain, it is that he has gone out of his way to sabotage conservative principles. Not only has he sabotaged conservatives, he has demonized them. He said evangelical supporters of Bush were "intolerant" and compared them to Al Sharpton. He said tax cuts were a gift to the rich. He made all kinds of accusations about immigration opponents, even implying they were racists. He bizarrely has led the fight for kid gloves treatment of captured terrorists. He has lied about or obfuscated his past positions, such as on amnesty. He blatantly lied about Romney's position on Iraq. He regards any criticism of his record as a personal attack.
If you believe he will veto a democrat tax increase, I think you're dreaming. He will claim things are even worse than he imagined and that he was elected to work with democrats. He's already on record spewing class warfare nonsense. His understanding of the economy is nonexistent. I could easily see him going along with a cap gains increase and reinstituting the estate tax.
As Ann Coulter put it, at least with Hillary or Obama in the White House, republicans will know who the enemy is. McCain would only confuse matters, and republicans would be under pressure to support his idiotic proposals as matter of party loyalty. I say no thanks.